Chrome 56 Quietly Added Bluetooth Snitch API (theregister.co.uk)
Richard Chirgwin, writing for The Register: When Google popped out Chrome 56 at the end of January it was keen to remind us it's making the web safer by flagging non-HTTPS sites. But Google made little effort to publicise another feature that's decidedly less friendly to privacy, because it lets websites ask about users' Bluetooth devices and harvest information from them through the browser. That's more a pitch to developers, as is clear in this YouTube video from Pete LePage of the Chrome Developers team. "Until now, the ability to communicate with Bluetooth devices has been possible only for native apps. With Chrome 56, your Web app can communicate with nearby Bluetooth devices in a private and secure manner, using the Web Bluetooth API," Google shares in the video. "The Web Bluetooth API uses the GATT [Generic Attribute Profile - ed] protocol, which enables your app to connect to devices such as light bulbs, toys, heart-rate monitors, LED displays and more, with just a few lines of JavaScript." In other words, the API lets websites ask your browser "what Bluetooth devices can you see," find out what your fridge, and so on, is capable of, and interact with it.
How are the appliances going to join M2M (machine to machine) facebook, if they don't have connectivity? In there they will share funny and not so funny stories of their masters and plot world domination.
Bluetooth my refrigerator down, and the science projects in it will become more powerful than you can imagine.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
I wouldn't want to be in Brent Spiner's shoes right now.
#DeleteFacebook
The real question is, why is such a wall of text, posted by an AC and with a score of -1, auto-expanded to full view while some real comments are not?
The power of God.